Same here, got stuck in an infinite loop of the booster pad (?) sending slamming me into the wall over and over.
Absolutely! In my opinion, the only way to learn anything in any meaningful way is to actually do the thing. In the example you described, you'll quickly start jumping into "Wait, how do I configure a firewall?" and…
I would love to use Safari more, but unfortunately Facebook Messenger and similar ilk (maybe all messaging apps?) seems to be completely busted on it.
> "adding rich text editing features to a text editor” Yeah, we already had that. In the form of Wordpad. Which was EOL'd. And now we have Notepad with AI features. Notepad was, and always should have been, a simple &…
Glad (/s) to see the MBA-ification of tech companies continues uninterrupted as we enter the second half of the decade.
> So management basically have no clue and want you to figure out how to use AI? This is basically the same story I have heard both my own place of employment and also from a number of friends. There is a "need" for AI…
Further to this - even if the script doesn't contain malware and you're 100% happy to run with this persons' defaults, you probably still shouldn't, as it doesn't teach you what you're actually doing. Presuming you're a…
To be fair though, I don't think it's unreasonable for the "average user" to expect that there are sensible defaults for the things they buy / install. Obviously, there's a huge difference between something like a car…
To preface this, I'm not a Japanese speaker, so perhaps my fears are misplaced, but learning from anime seems like it'd present users with a very particular flavour of Japanese (i.e. one that is much more hyperactive or…
> Sticking with just the Gmail interface (or whatever) is so limiting Perhaps it's the fact that I grew up with Gmail throughout my education (and now my career), but most local clients lack one key feature - quick…
Good lord, that's awful. I'm definitely firmly in Camp Apple for the most part, but this just looks actually atrocious.
Definitely not an accident - the announcement was made on the TF blog [0] [0] - https://www.teamfortress.com/post.php?id=238809
TF2 definitely looks amazing, but it very much does not perform amazing - at least, not anymore. Source really wasn't built for the amount of particles present in the cosmetics (especially the "Unusuals")
It absolutely grinds my gears - Chrome's profile system and / or Firefox's container tab system work somewhat, but it feels like a bandaid fix.
Oooh, this sounds promising - thank you so much!
The institution I work for is a completely Google-based shop, with an Enterprise agreement with Google for data retention and various other requirements. Even for us, Google Takeout is a complete mess that fails all the…
> If users could set their own preferred AI bot as the go-to for Siri requests or writing help, like Anthropic’s Claude or — say, xAI’s Grok — it’s doubtful that Musk would be yelling this loudly about the dangers of…
And I'd be willing to wager an even smaller amount of "users" are actually real people.
> “if your objection is honoured, it will be applied going forwards”. It is absolutely wild being in the "before times" (i.e. before any real legislation is applied to the use of data for AI training) and seeing…
Looks like it's affecting anything Bing-related, at least over here in Australia. Same symptoms for Bing and Ecosia.
God, the future really is stupid, isn't it?
> The fact that you drew a comparison to BBC is telling. That indeed was a specific choice - you could also state that it's a state-run "propaganda tool". It's also going to have a western (specifically UK) based view…
That's not a solid basis for considering something to be "fake", let alone to be banned. I could say that I have read and compared the BBC to Truth Social, and decided that BBC is "fake news"; that doesn't mean it's…
> Yes, and the result was a billions of billions of combinations of those updates. I was recently talking to a colleague about this, and it was remarkable to me how "quickly" they had forgotten the hell of having…
I know it's old-hat to say at this point, but I'm getting really exhausted of seeing companies trying to sate investors and techbros by introducing more and more AI-powered "features" into existing applications. I don't…
Same here, got stuck in an infinite loop of the booster pad (?) sending slamming me into the wall over and over.
Absolutely! In my opinion, the only way to learn anything in any meaningful way is to actually do the thing. In the example you described, you'll quickly start jumping into "Wait, how do I configure a firewall?" and…
I would love to use Safari more, but unfortunately Facebook Messenger and similar ilk (maybe all messaging apps?) seems to be completely busted on it.
> "adding rich text editing features to a text editor” Yeah, we already had that. In the form of Wordpad. Which was EOL'd. And now we have Notepad with AI features. Notepad was, and always should have been, a simple &…
Glad (/s) to see the MBA-ification of tech companies continues uninterrupted as we enter the second half of the decade.
> So management basically have no clue and want you to figure out how to use AI? This is basically the same story I have heard both my own place of employment and also from a number of friends. There is a "need" for AI…
Further to this - even if the script doesn't contain malware and you're 100% happy to run with this persons' defaults, you probably still shouldn't, as it doesn't teach you what you're actually doing. Presuming you're a…
To be fair though, I don't think it's unreasonable for the "average user" to expect that there are sensible defaults for the things they buy / install. Obviously, there's a huge difference between something like a car…
To preface this, I'm not a Japanese speaker, so perhaps my fears are misplaced, but learning from anime seems like it'd present users with a very particular flavour of Japanese (i.e. one that is much more hyperactive or…
> Sticking with just the Gmail interface (or whatever) is so limiting Perhaps it's the fact that I grew up with Gmail throughout my education (and now my career), but most local clients lack one key feature - quick…
Good lord, that's awful. I'm definitely firmly in Camp Apple for the most part, but this just looks actually atrocious.
Definitely not an accident - the announcement was made on the TF blog [0] [0] - https://www.teamfortress.com/post.php?id=238809
TF2 definitely looks amazing, but it very much does not perform amazing - at least, not anymore. Source really wasn't built for the amount of particles present in the cosmetics (especially the "Unusuals")
It absolutely grinds my gears - Chrome's profile system and / or Firefox's container tab system work somewhat, but it feels like a bandaid fix.
Oooh, this sounds promising - thank you so much!
The institution I work for is a completely Google-based shop, with an Enterprise agreement with Google for data retention and various other requirements. Even for us, Google Takeout is a complete mess that fails all the…
> If users could set their own preferred AI bot as the go-to for Siri requests or writing help, like Anthropic’s Claude or — say, xAI’s Grok — it’s doubtful that Musk would be yelling this loudly about the dangers of…
And I'd be willing to wager an even smaller amount of "users" are actually real people.
> “if your objection is honoured, it will be applied going forwards”. It is absolutely wild being in the "before times" (i.e. before any real legislation is applied to the use of data for AI training) and seeing…
Looks like it's affecting anything Bing-related, at least over here in Australia. Same symptoms for Bing and Ecosia.
God, the future really is stupid, isn't it?
> The fact that you drew a comparison to BBC is telling. That indeed was a specific choice - you could also state that it's a state-run "propaganda tool". It's also going to have a western (specifically UK) based view…
That's not a solid basis for considering something to be "fake", let alone to be banned. I could say that I have read and compared the BBC to Truth Social, and decided that BBC is "fake news"; that doesn't mean it's…
> Yes, and the result was a billions of billions of combinations of those updates. I was recently talking to a colleague about this, and it was remarkable to me how "quickly" they had forgotten the hell of having…
I know it's old-hat to say at this point, but I'm getting really exhausted of seeing companies trying to sate investors and techbros by introducing more and more AI-powered "features" into existing applications. I don't…